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Weather Forecast

Saturday Afternoon/Evening Forecast Discussion

The showers and storms that moved through last night are gone, but more will be moving through as the evening progresses. An isolated strong storm is possible too, but the main threat will be heavy rainfall. This activity will continue through most of the night. Lows will be in the middle to upper 50s, with a southeast wind, shifting north at 5-15 mph. On Sunday, showers and thunderstorms will again be possible, but by the afternoon, there may be some clearing. Highs will be in the lower to middle 70s, with a west to northwest wind at 10-25 mph.

Our active weather pattern will continue into next week. Showers and storms will develop late Monday and into Monday night, mainly south. A better chance of showers and thunderstorms will be Wednesday and Thursday. Temperatures next week will be warmer. Highs should return to the 80s Monday through Wednesday, but cool off into the 70s Thursday and Friday. Next weekend is looking great, with some sunshine, and highs in the 80s!

Aaron White - Aaron joins the WDAY Weather team from Sioux Falls, South Dakota, where he worked as a Meteorologist and Weather Producer for KSFY, the ABC affiliate.Being an “army brat” most of his life, he grew up in many different states in the Midwest, and even another country. Aaron and his family lived in Germany for 3 years, before moving to Manhattan, Kansas in 2001. He calls Kansas his home state, having gone to junior high, high school and college there.He earned in Bachelors of Science degree in Atmospheric Science from the University of Kansas in 2012. While he was there, he did Undergraduate research on river flooding, which included a focus on the Red River. After his sophomore year, he began an internship at KSFY, and eventually worked to become a weather producer.Aside from forecasting the weather, he participated in storm chasing. During his time at the University of Kansas, he and some of his colleagues chased storms across Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Missouri, and Iowa. After the Super Outbreak of 2011, Aaron and his colleagues raised $3000 and collected food and water to take to Tuscaloosa, Alabama, which was ravaged by and EF4 tornado on April 27, 2011. His group spent a week there, helping clean up debris left over from the tornado. It was an eye opening experience for him, having not seen that kind of devastation in person before.Aaron has always been passionate about weather, and gets reminded about watching The Weather Channel when he was 3, at family gatherings. When he isn’t forecasting, Aaron enjoys swimming, running, and cheering on the Kansas Jayhawks.